Astronomers probing the edges of the Milky Way have in recent years observed superflares -- huge bursts of energy from stars that can be seen from hundreds of light years away.
Superflares
erupted from the Sun could disrupt electronics across the Earth,
causing widespread black outs and shorting out communication
satellites in orbit, scientists warn.
Astronomers
probing the edges of the Milky Way have in recent years observed
superflares -- huge bursts of energy from stars that can be seen from
hundreds of light years away.
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Until
recently, researchers assumed that such explosions occurred mostly on
stars that, unlike Earth's, were young and active.
Scientists
from University of Colorado (CU) Boulder in the US have found that
superflares can occur on older, quieter stars like our own -- albeit
more rarely, or about once every few thousand years.
If
a superflare erupted from the sun, the Earth
would likely sit in the path of a wave of high-energy radiation,
researchers said.
Such
a blast could disrupt electronics across the globe, causing
widespread black outs and shorting out communication satellites in
orbit.
"Our
study shows that superflares are rare events. But there is some
possibility that we could experience such an event in the next 100
years or so," said Yuta Notsu, a researcher in CU Boulder.
Scientists
first discovered this phenomenon from an unlikely source: the Kepler
Space Telescope. The NASA spacecraft, launched in 2009, seeks out
planets circling stars far from Earth.
However,
it also found something odd about those stars themselves. In rare
events, the light from distant stars seemed to get suddenly, and
momentarily, brighter.
Researchers
dubbed those humongous bursts of energy "superflares."
Notsu
explained that normal-sized flares are common on the Sun. However,
what the Kepler data was showing seemed to be much bigger, on the
order of hundreds to thousands of times more powerful than the
largest flare ever recorded with modern instruments on Earth.
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